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O mark

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Perey (talk | contribs) at 13:11, 20 November 2020 (Undid revision 988742917 by 2001:D08:DE:3A8B:D4CD:980D:6BE9:50F5 (talk): Replaced character under discussion with lower-case letter O). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

An O mark, also known as Marujirushi (丸印) in Japan and Gongpyo (공표(공標), ball mark) in Korea, is the name of the symbol "⭕" used to represent affirmation in East Asia, similar to its Western equivalent of the checkmark. Its opposite is the X mark ("✗") or ("×").

Hanamaru

The hanamaru (花丸) is a variant of the O mark used in Japan, written as 💮︎. It is typically drawn as a spiral surrounded by rounded flower petals, suggesting a flower. It is frequently used in praising or complimenting children, and the motif often appears in children's characters and logos.

The hanamaru is frequently written on tests if a student has achieved full marks or an otherwise outstanding result. Sometimes used in place of an O mark in grading written response problems if a student's answer is especially good. Some teachers will add more rotations to the spiral the better the answer is. It is also used as a symbol for good weather.[citation needed]

Unicode

Unicode provides various related symbols, including:

Symbol Unicode code point (hex) Name
U+25CB WHITE CIRCLE
U+25CF BLACK CIRCLE
U+25EF LARGE CIRCLE
⭕︎ U+2B55 HEAVY LARGE CIRCLE
⭕️
💮︎ U+1F4AE WHITE FLOWER
💮️

U+2B55 HEAVY LARGE CIRCLE and U+1F4AE 💮 WHITE FLOWER have both text and emoji presentations, as shown in the table. Both characters default to emoji presentation.

See also